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Maurice Garin feature, August 8, 2006

Cheating is nothing new in the Tour

All of the furore surrounding cheating in the Tour de France is nothing
new. In the early days, riders were involved in devious practices that make
today's Tour stars seem like choirboys. The first winner of the event, Maurice
Garin, was disqualified the following year trying to defend his title for catching
a train instead of riding his bike. Les Woodland puts the 2006 Landis
affair into some sort of historical context.

There's a historical irony in this Floyd Landis business. He'll be remembered,
unless his lawyers can persuade us otherwise, as the biggest cheat in Tour history,
the only man to have had his yellow jersey torn from his back.

But history will be wrong. The first big Tour cheat, Maurice Garin, would not
only have failed any modern dope test but he also extended the concept of cycle-racing
to include catching a train.

Nobody knows for certain that Maurice Garin waited at an out-of-the-way railway
platform back in 1904. He wasn't caught with the ticket stubs in his pocket.
But a while back I met a man, a gravedigger in Garin's home town of Lens in
northern France, who knew him. The gravedigger was just a boy then and Garin
an old man, but there was no doubt in the gravedigger's memory that Garin had
admitted catching a train to skip round some tricky or boring bits of the course.

"He was amused by it," Maurice Vernaldé told me. "Not embarrassed, not after
all those years, and he used to laugh and say 'Well, I was young…' and admit
it. Maybe at the time he said he didn't, but when he got older and it no longer
mattered so much…."

Garin was disqualified from the 1904 Tour, probably for catching a train when
he should have been cycling. Why 'probably'? Because the French federation had
grown alarmed at the uproar, enthusiasm and even anger that the Tour had created.
This was the race, after all, in which riders were knocked off their bikes and
even beaten up. Officials weren't going to do anything to make things worse
and that included not publishing the findings of their inquiry. Just like what
may happen to Floyd Landis in 2006, he was disqualified after the Tour was over.

Maybe the officials intended to say much later about what had happened but
in time the filing cabinet full of papers disappeared. The original French federation
vanished with the First World War and so, incidentally, did all the Tour's own
records. They were placed in a van to be sent south to escape the invading Germans
and were never seen again.

Maurice Vernaldé wishes now that he had spent more time talking to Garin. But
he was just a child at the time and he wasn't always happy to be sent to buy
paraffin at the garage that Garin had on the edge of town. Garin was like many
old men and couldn't - in the eyes of a young boy like Vernaldé - be stopped
from rambling on and on with his memories.

More than that, Garin in his old age grew increasingly senile and towards the
end of his life wandered through Lens reliving the Tours of years before. In
the early Tours, riders were given route sheets and were told to sign register
books in each big town to prove they had kept to the course. Garin would walk,
mumbling, through the streets of Lens, growing ever more distressed, until finally
he ended up at the police station to ask for directions for the 'contrôle'.
He'd be patiently escorted back home again.

Garin won the 1903 Tour and would have won the next year as well had he and
a handful of others not been thrown out. Cheating was nothing novel to anyone
in the field because, even if they didn't do it themselves, they were well aware
that others were taking short cuts, being towed by cars (a wire fixed to a wing
mirror and held between the teeth by a cork was a favourite trick) or even sitting
inside them. Taking a train has to be seen in that context. And the fact that
the Tour back then wasn't the Tour de France but just a Tour de
France, a new race that nobody knew would grow into something special.

The alcohol they downed wasn't for cheating - not 'proper' cheating, anyway
- even if it would have them thrown out of any modern Tour and into a modern
jail had they been driving a car. Many an early bikie would have looked for
the controls in a state as befuddled as Garin's. The only way they had to numb
the pain and hunger of long hours in the saddle on unmade roads was to get themselves
half-drunk on wine.

When the excitingly-named Hippolyte Aucouturier was described as vulnerable
in races, "because he drank too much", it wasn't because he rode with a bidon
of water in his hand like Landis in his miracle stage of 2006. It was because
he gurgled down more wine than his stomach could handle.

It did make some sense. Wine was the everyday drink of agricultural workers
for whom the water supply was less than pure and alcoholism remained a problem
in France right into the late 1950s. It was to combat excessive drinking that
France led the way in banning sports sponsorship by drinks firms and the reason
that teams like St-Raphaël (an apéritif) and Pelforth (beer) vanished so suddenly.

You can see pictures of old-time riders with wine bottles in their racks. In
the absence of food stations or team cars, there are pictures of riders breaking
into their 10-hour stages by sitting in a restaurant with a plate of food and
yet another bottle of plonk. It was just the way it was.

And it was the way it stayed until the 1960s. The Tour's organisers limited
the water that riders could accept on the move. Anything they wanted above the
limit had to be obtained from village pumps, springs or from helpful spectators.
Or it had to be stolen from bars.

The chasse à la canette - the romantic name for jumping off your bike and running
into a bar to steal any drink that could be picked up - was a shameful if colourful
episode of Tour history that made for good pictures but a poor image. The big
stars didn't do it but their domestiques did and they were expected to race
back to the bunch to hand out whatever they had plundered.

Vin Denson, when he was a domestique for Rik van Looy, spoke English but only
elementary Dutch and French. When van Looy bellowed "Denson… café!" in French,
Denson knew his leader wanted a drink. Come the next bar, Denson brought van
Looy a bidon. Van Looy, puzzled he hadn't been presented with a glass bottle,
sniffed the contents and, with a wrinkled nose of contempt, poured the whole
lot on the road.

"It was that day", Denson recalled, "that I learned that café meant not only
'coffee' but 'bar'."